After falling behind normal by
as much as six-and-three-quarter inches in Saint Cloud, the weather pattern
dramatically changed during the second half of May. Saint Cloud remains on
the cool side of a front that marked the boundary between summerish heat and
humidity, which came as far north as Iowa at times, and relatively cool Canadian
air. The result was much more widespread thunderstorms that doused the southern
two-thirds and the northern quarter of the state. During May, the Saint Cloud
Municipal Airport received 6.73 inches of rainfall, 3.76 inches above normal.
This was the most May rainfall since 1965 and the 7th wettest May of the 124
Mays in Saint Cloud history. (Link
to 10 Wettest/Driest Mays) All but 0.07 inch fell in the last 16 days
of the month. There were three days (May 16, May 23, May 26) with at least
an inch of rain, tying May 1938 and May 1965 for the most days with one-inch
rainfall in Saint Cloud history (Days with
>= 1.00 inch Precipitation). May 2004 also had 6 days with at least
half an inch of rain, tying 1908 and 1937 for the most May days with that
much rain (Days with >= 0.50 inch Precipitation).
Saint Cloud State University, due to the hit-and-miss nature of thunderstorms,
picked up a total of 7.68 inches of rain.

The effect of the May rain on the rainfall
shortage since last July has been dramatic. At the start of the month, the
May
3 growing season precipitation chart from the Minnesota State Climatology
Office showed the severe dryness through most of western and central Minnesota.
The May
24 growing season precipitation chart is quite different as almost all
the red and brown, indicating low precipitation, has changed to near normal
yellows and greens in all of central Minnesota, except for a swath of dryness
from the Arrowhead to Ortonville and from International Falls to Ada. The
worst dry conditions continue from the Brainerd Lakes northeastward to the
Iron Range near Hibbing. The same change can be seen between in the six-week
loop of the Drought Monitor as the western two-thirds of Minnesota were
in severe drought conditions in early May. The latest
May 25 Drought Monitor shows that only the Big Stone Lake-Lake Traverse-Ortonville
area remained in the severe category and that doesn't count the rainfall since
last Tuesday.

The frequent cloudiness and rainfall
during the May kept temperatures chilly. The average
temperature was 53.7°F, 2.9°F below normal. This ranks in the
coldest quarter of all Mays in Saint Cloud records, but was 2.1°F warmer
than just two years ago and 2.5°F milder than May 1997, the 10th coldest
May in Saint Cloud records.( Link
to 10 Warmest/Coldest Mays; All May statistics)

May 31 marks the end of meteorological
spring. The heavy rainfall of the past 16 days produced a Spring precipitation
total of 9.36 inches, nearly 4.89 inches above normal. This makes Spring 2004
the 19th wettest spring of the 108 springs in Saint Cloud records. It also
continues the trend of wet springs and/or early summers of the past four years.
In both 2001 and 2003, the wet early growing season sharply reversed during
the second half of the year. However, it does put into perspective how short
term these dry spells have been. Top
10 Wettest Springs in Saint Cloud history

The cool May weather dropped the
average spring temperature to 44.2°F, still 1.3°F above normal. The
moist conditions did keep the temperature from dropping below freezing since
May 15. If this holds up, it will be a near normal last frost (average: May
10th). However, we are still in a relatively cool weather pattern, although
we would have to dry out tremendously to get below freezing during the next
few days.